This paper explores continuity and innovation in the everyday relational practices of
a group of post-accession Polish migrants who first arrived in the UK when in their late
teens and twenties. In the context of claims that migration has allowed younger migrants
to pursue lives free from familial ties and responsibilities, the paper focuses on their
living arrangements in the UK and the extent to which they actively eschew or embrace
familial relationships, practices and commitments. Our data suggest that moving to the
UK had undoubtedly facilitated new freedoms and opportunities, yet these were utilised
by many to bring forward, rather than delay, a sequence of broadly conventional domestic
transitions, accompanied for many by ongoing dependency and interconnectedness with
networks of extended family members who had also migrated to the UK. Our paper
draws on the concepts of frontiering and relativising (Bryceson and Vuorela 2002) and
argues that our participants were engaged in sets of practices linked to both. Further,
these practices not only entailed a continual revision of migrants’ sense of family identity,
affected by life stage, but were also underpinned for many by the centrality of traditional
conceptualisations of family.
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